Services

3. Determination of remune­ration

3.1 Nomination and Compensation Committee (NCC)

Pursuant to the Articles of Incorporation and the Organisational Regulations of Geberit AG, the NCC supports the Board of Directors (BoD) in the fulfilment of its duties and responsibilities in the area of remuneration and personnel policy, including:

Establishment and periodical review of the Group’s remuneration policy and principles

Yearly review of the individual remuneration of the CEO and of the other members of the Group Executive Board (GEB)

Yearly performance assessment of the CEO and of the other members of the Group Executive Board

Preparation of the Remuneration Report

Personnel development of the Group Executive Board

Succession planning and nomination for positions on the Group Executive Board

Pre-selection of candidates for election or re-election to the Board of Directors

Approval and authority levels on remuneration matters:

Decision on

CEO

NCC

BoD

AGM

Remuneration policy and guidelines, in line with the provisions of the Articles of Association

The NCC consists of independent and non-executive members of the Board of Directors only who are elected annually by the shareholders at the General Meeting. Since the 2017 General Meeting, the NCC has consisted of Hartmut Reuter as Chairman as well as Eunice Zehnder-Lai and Jørgen Tang-Jensen as members.

The NCC meets at least three times per year. In 2017, it held three meetings covering, among others, the predefined recurring agenda items illustrated below. The participation rate for NCC meetings in 2017 was 100%.

February

August

December

Remuneration policy

Participation programme(employee participationprogramme, LTI grant)

Target income Head Internal Audit (following year)

GEB matters

Individual performance appraisal (previous year)

STI payout (previous year)

Vesting of equity awards (previous years)

Benchmarking of GEB remuneration

Succession planning for GEB positions

Talent management session

Target remuneration (following year)

Target setting for STI (following year)

Option valuation and definition of performance criteria LTI for next grant

BoD matters

BoD remuneration (following year)

BoD evaluation

Governance

AGM preparation (maximum amounts of remuneration of GEB and BoD to be submitted to say-on-pay votes)

Review of shareholders’ and proxy advisors’ feedback on the Remuneration Report

Corporate update

Update on diversity

Draft Remuneration Report

Agenda NCC for following year

As a general rule, the Chairman of the Board of Directors, the CEO and the Head of Corporate Human Resources participate in the meetings of the NCC. The Chairman of the NCC may invite other executives as appropriate. However, the Chairman of the Board of Directors and the executives do not take part in the section of the meetings where their own performance and/or remuneration are discussed. At the end of each meeting, a closed session takes place among the members of the NCC only.

After each meeting, the Chairman of the NCC reports to the Board of Directors on its activities and recommendations. The minutes of the NCC meetings are available to the full Board of Directors.

3.2 Process of determination of remuneration

Benchmarks and external consultants

Geberit regularly reviews the remuneration of its executives, including that of the members of the Group Executive Board. This includes regular participation, every two to three years, in benchmark studies on comparable functions in other industrial companies. In 2017, a detailed analysis of the remuneration of the CEO and the other members of the Group Executive Board was carried out by an independent external compensation consulting firm, Willis Towers Watson (Switzerland). This consulting firm has no other mandates from Geberit. The remuneration analysis was conducted on the basis of a peer group of industrial companies headquartered in Switzerland: ABB, AMS, Aryzta, Barry Callebaut, Clariant, Dätwyler, dormakaba, Forbo, Georg Fischer, Givaudan, LafargeHolcim, Logitech, Lonza, OC Oerlikon, Schindler, Sika, Sonova, Straumann and Sulzer. The study, together with other published data, was used to determine the target remuneration levels of the CEO and other members of the Group Executive Board for the business year 2018. While many different factors (such as the individual role, experience in the role and contribution, company performance and affordability) are considered to determine remuneration levels, the policy of Geberit is to provide a target remuneration that is in principle positioned around the market median.

With regard to the remuneration of the Board of Directors, the remuneration and levels are reviewed periodically by the NCC. Such a review took place in 2015 with a benchmarking analysis provided by Willis Towers Watson, which covered companies of the Swiss Market Index Mid (SMIM).

Performance- Management

The actual remuneration effectively paid out in a given year to the Group Executive Board members depends on the corporate results and on the individual performance. The individual performance is assessed through the formal annual performance management process: company and individual performance objectives are approved at the beginning of the business year and achievement against those objectives is assessed after year-end. The performance appraisal is the basis for the determination of the actual remuneration.

Objective setting
(December – January)

Determination of individual objectives

Mid-year review
(July)

Mid-year discussion on performance to date against predefined objectives

Final review (December – January)

Self-appraisal and performance assessment

Determination of compensation(February – March)

Determination of actual variable compensation

3.3 Shareholder involvement

In the last five years, based on the feedback received by shareholders and shareholder representatives, Geberit has made significant efforts to improve the remuneration disclosure in terms of both transparency and of the level of detail provided about the remuneration principles and programmes. The positive outcome of the consultative votes on the Remuneration Reports since 2013 indicates that shareholders welcome the progress made. Geberit will continue to submit the Remuneration Report to a consultative shareholder vote at the General Meeting, so that shareholders have an opportunity to express their opinion about the remuneration system.

Articles of Incorporation

Principles applicable to performance-related pay:
the members of the Group Executive Board may be paid variable remuneration which may include short- and long-term elements and which is linked to the achievement of one or several performance criteria.

Binding votes on maximum aggregate compensation amounts of the Board of Directors and Group Executive Board:
shareholders vote prospectively on the maximum aggregate remuneration amount for the Board of Directors until the next ordinary General Meeting and for the maximum aggregate remuneration amount for the Group Executive Board for the following business year. Further, shareholders can express their opinion on the remuneration principles and structure through a consultative vote on the Remuneration Report.

Additional amount for payments to members of the Group Executive Board appointed after the vote on remuneration at the General Meeting:
for the remuneration of members of the Group Executive Board who have been appointed after the approval of the maximum aggregate remuneration amount by the General Meeting, and to the extent that the maximum aggregate remuneration amount as approved does not suffice, an amount of up to 40% of the maximum aggregate remuneration amount approved for the Group Executive Board is available without further approval of the General Meeting.

Loans, credit facilities and post-employment benefits for members of the Board of Directors and of the Group Executive Board:
no loans or credits shall be granted to members of the Board of Directors or the Group Executive Board.

The provisions of the Articles of Incorporation have been kept broad so that the Board of Directors has sufficient flexibility to make any necessary amendments to the remuneration programmes. The remuneration principles currently in place are more restrictive than the provisions of the Articles of Incorporation and are aligned with good practice in corporate governance; for example, the independent members of the Board of Directors are not eligible for any variable remuneration or retirement benefits (see also the Remuneration architecture, Board of Directors).